GAMES FOR E NGLISH AND L ANGUAGE A RTS
Charlene Hunter Isobel L. Livingstone Bob Loeffelbein Pat Miller Cheryl Miller Thurston Karen Zeinert
Cottonwood Press, Inc. Fort Collins, Colorado
Third edition copyright © 2005 by Cottonwood Press, Inc. Second edition copyright © 1995 by Cottonwood Press, Inc. First edition copyright © 1991 by Cottonwood Press, Inc. Permission is granted to reproduce activities in this book, in other than electronic form, for the purchaser’s own personal use in the classroom, provided that the copyright notice appears on each reproduction. Otherwise, no part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without written permission from Cottonwood Press, Inc. Requests for permission should be addressed to: Cottonwood Press, Inc. 109-B Cameron Drive Fort Collins, Colorado 80525 E-mail:
[email protected] Web: www.cottonwoodpress.com Phone: 1-800-864-4297 Fax: 970-204-0761 Print ISBN 1-877673-12-9 E-Book ISBN 978-1-936162-08-6 Printed in the United States of America
Table of Contents Number, Please! ..........................................................................................................................7 Ik! ................................................................................................................................................9 Disguises ...................................................................................................................................11 Fruits and Vegetables................................................................................................................13 Rhyme Time..............................................................................................................................15 Fill the Squares..........................................................................................................................17 Library Scavenger Hunt (Teacher Instructions).................................. .....................................19 Library Scavenger Hunt (Team Instructions) ...........................................................................21 Categories for the Library Scavenger Hunt ..............................................................................22 Scrambles ..................................................................................................................................23 Chris Rock Meets the Slimy Rubber Band Monster ................................................................25 Questions, Questions.................................................................................................................26 Alphabet Trade Names..............................................................................................................28 Xtra! Xtra!.................................................................................................................................30 Those Disagreeable G’s ............................................................................................................33 Winter........................................................................................................................................35 Diamond Stories........................................................................................................................37 A+..............................................................................................................................................38 Thanksgiving.............................................................................................................................40 Changing Around ......................................................................................................................42 One Step at a Time....................................................................................................................44 Holiday Anagrams ....................................................................................................................47 The Ded Cat ..............................................................................................................................49 Nouns, Nouns, Everywhere Nouns ...........................................................................................51 Martians vs. Earthlings .............................................................................................................53 Lipograms .................................................................................................................................55 Holiday Letters..........................................................................................................................57 Dictionary Puzzle......................................................................................................................59 Happy Trails..............................................................................................................................61 Summer Vacation......................................................................................................................63 Hearts and Flowers....................................................................................................................68
Cars ...........................................................................................................................................70 Colors and More Colors............................................................................................................72 Diamonds ..................................................................................................................................74 The Same, The Same.................................................................................................................76 Sports ........................................................................................................................................78 Pluses ........................................................................................................................................81 Word Spirals .............................................................................................................................83 Rhyming Couplets.....................................................................................................................84 Food for Thought ......................................................................................................................87 In Hiding ...................................................................................................................................89 E-E-E-E-E-Easy Does It ...........................................................................................................91
Name ___________________________
Number, Please! Challenge #1. Each word below contains the letters necessary to spell a number. However, the letters are not always together or in their proper order. For each word, see if you can find the letters that spell a number. The first one is done for you. one 1. Snooze __________________________
6. Wrote ___________________________
2. Favorite _________________________
7. Exercise _________________________
3. Twine __________________________
8. Tightest _________________________
4. Coiffure _________________________
9. Ethereal _________________________
5. Froze ___________________________
10. Beginning ________________________
Challenge #2. For each item below, add the two words together and rearrange the letters so that you can spell out a number. The first one is done for you. thirteen 1. tree + thin _______________________
3. inn + yet _________________________
2. vent + yes _______________________
4. hit + try __________________________
Challenge #3. The sentences below contain the letters necessary to spell a number. However, this time the letters you need are in order, and the numbers are hidden within words or spread out over several words. Study the sentences carefully and circle the hidden numbers. There are ten numbers in all. 1. I couldn’t find a phone that would work. 2. Edith Reed shows real dexterity; she is certainly sleight of hand. 3. Last week I read an exciting book about a Norse venture. 4. That particular story of our past is best forgotten. 5. Dot went yesterday and Leni Nelson left on Friday, but Chef Iverson doesn’t plan to leave the restaurant until today.
Challenge #4. See if you can add at least five new items to any one of the challenges above.
Answer Key Number, Please! Challenge #1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
one five ten four zero two six eight three nine
Challenge #2 1. 2. 3. 4.
thirteen seventy ninety thirty
Challenge #3 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
I couldn’t find a phone that would work. Edith Reed shows real dexterity; she is certainly sleight of hand. Last week I read an exciting book about a Norse venture. That particular story of our past is best forgotten. Dot went yesterday and Leni Nelson left Friday, but Chef Iverson doesn’t plan to leave the restaurant until today.
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Name ___________________________
Ik! Many English words end with an “ik” sound, which can be spelled in different ways. See if you can find the “ik” word that fits each definition below. 1. medicine ________________________________________________________________ 2. part of a candle ___________________________________________________________ 3. tiny insect _______________________________________________________________ 4. top story of some houses ____________________________________________________ 5. piece of wood ____________________________________________________________ 6. material used in building ____________________________________________________ 7. action with the foot ________________________________________________________ 8. slight wave of the hand _____________________________________________________ 9. to imitate ________________________________________________________________ 10. choose __________________________________________________________________ 11. cut slightly _______________________________________________________________ 12. play; have fun ____________________________________________________________ 13. great ____________________________________________________________________ 14. smooth or slippery _________________________________________________________ 15. not thin _________________________________________________________________ 16. funny ___________________________________________________________________ 17. very worried _____________________________________________________________ 18. ill ______________________________________________________________________ 19. fast _____________________________________________________________________ 20. humorous, five-lined poem __________________________________________________ Now make your own puzzle, based upon a different word ending. See if you can think of at least 20 words that end in either “at” or “it.” On your own paper, write a puzzle similar to this one, with definitions for each of the 20 words you have chosen.
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Answer Key Ik! 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
tonic wick tick attic stick brick kick flick mimic pick nick frolic terrific slick thick comic frantic sick quick limerick
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Name
Disguises Do you recognize the titles below? They are all the names of common television shows, books or movies—but in disguise. The words have been replaced with synonyms. See if you can “decode” these mysterious titles. (Hint: A thesaurus is the perfect place to discover synonyms.) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Boy in Between ___________________________________________________________ The Spectacular Sprint ______________________________________________________ Fable About Plaything _____________________________________________________ Seedy Roadway ___________________________________________________________ Prehistoric Recreation Area _________________________________________________ Threatening Apparition _____________________________________________________ Disc of Wealth ____________________________________________________________ Emerald Breakfast Item and Pig Meat _________________________________________ Master of the Circles _______________________________________________________ Meteor Conflicts __________________________________________________________ Carpet Rodents ___________________________________________________________ Ruler of the Mound ________________________________________________________ The Finisher _____________________________________________________________ Feline Monarch ___________________________________________________________ Drastic Remodel __________________________________________________________
Now create ten disguises of your own. Use synonyms to replace the names of television shows, books, movies, musical groups or songs.
Real Name
Disguised Name
1.
________________________________
_________________________________
2.
________________________________
_________________________________
3.
________________________________
_________________________________
4.
________________________________
_________________________________
5.
________________________________
_________________________________
6.
________________________________
_________________________________
7.
________________________________
_________________________________
8.
________________________________
_________________________________
9.
________________________________
_________________________________
10. ________________________________
_________________________________
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Answer Key Disguises 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15.
Malcolm in the Middle The Amazing Race Toy Story Sesame Street Jurassic Park The Phantom Menace Wheel of Fortune Green Eggs and Ham Lord of the Rings Star Wars Rugrats King of the Hill The Terminator Lion King Extreme Makeover
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Name
Fruits and Vegetables There are 50 fruits and vegetables hidden below. Unscramble the letters in each item so that you spell the name of the fruit or vegetable. The first one is done for you. artichoke ________________
26. lump ____________________________
2. pleap ___________________________
27. tocnuoc _________________________
3. ape _____________________________
28. ermtawnole ______________________
4. grenoa __________________________
29. cobcriol _________________________
5. hancips _________________________
30. saqush __________________________
6. prage ___________________________
31. ewets optoat ______________________
7. nabana __________________________
32. nabe stropu _______________________
8. slebsurs prustos ___________________
33. chincuzi _________________________
9. trocar ___________________________
34. amy ____________________________
10. brasterwry _______________________
35. tead ____________________________
11. omnel ___________________________
36. surgpaasa ________________________
12. iwik ____________________________
37. harbrub __________________________
13. erbrybeul ________________________
38. gacabeb _________________________
14. mile ____________________________
39. cleyer ___________________________
15. sperbrary ________________________
40. yapapa __________________________
16. nabe ____________________________
41. bumcucer ________________________
17. ronc ____________________________
42. kuppimn _________________________
18. perpep __________________________
43. tripcoa __________________________
19. shomurom _______________________
44. shardi ___________________________
20. totoap ___________________________
45. cheap ___________________________
21. nonoi ___________________________
46. mootat __________________________
22. fragpertui ________________________
47. ganom __________________________
23. reap ____________________________
48. bekrechuryl ______________________
24. pleapenip ________________________
49. uprint ___________________________
25. apacotunel _______________________
50. veloi ____________________________
1. chertikoa
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Answer Key Fruits and Vegetables 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.
26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50.
artichoke apple pea orange spinach grape banana Brussels sprouts carrot strawberry lemon kiwi blueberry lime raspberry bean corn pepper mushroom potato onion grapefruit pear pineapple cantaloupe
plum coconut watermelon broccoli squash sweet potato bean sprout zucchini yam date asparagus rhubarb cabbage celery papaya cucumber pumpkin apricot radish peach tomato mango huckleberry turnip olive
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Name
Rhyme Time Part A. Rewrite the phrases below so that each is a two-word rhyme. The first one is done for you, as an example. 1. Thin James
slim Jim
2. Depressed father __________________________________________________________ 3. Light-colored netting _______________________________________________________ 4. High interest _____________________________________________________________ 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
Cold hammer or saw _______________________________________________________ A distant sun _____________________________________________________________ Illuminated gravel excavation ________________________________________________ Wicked beetle ____________________________________________________________ An unhappy wildebeest _____________________________________________________ A brown panda ___________________________________________________________ Important show for a rock star _______________________________________________ Smart undertaking _________________________________________________________ Sizzling pan ______________________________________________________________ Reporters driving about, looking for stories _____________________________________ Overfed Angora ___________________________________________________________ Small storage area for novels ________________________________________________ Wagnerian opera __________________________________________________________ Clever two-winged insect ___________________________________________________ An extra piece of fruit ______________________________________________________ A big boat _______________________________________________________________
Part B. Now add at least five more items of your own to this puzzle, using items 1-20 as models. Be sure to include an answer key on the back of your paper.
Part C. Write a paragraph that includes as many rhyming words as possible. For example, you might begin with something like this: Sue Slew saw a new gnu and a rare bear at the McGoo Zoo on Tuesday morning, a loon at noon, and a wild boar at four.
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Answer Key Rhyme Time 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
slim Jim sad dad pale veil great rate cool tool far star lit pit evil weevil blue gnu rare bear big gig cleaver endeavor hot pot news cruise fat cat book nook long song sly fly spare pear large barge
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Name
Fill the Squares Using only the names of television shows, see how many squares you can fill in the graph below. These are the rules: 1. Each title must intersect with at least one other title, sharing a letter in common. 2. Titles must read from left to right, or from top to bottom. 3. All words must be spelled correctly. 4. Your goal is to leave as few as possible squares empty. When you are finished, you will score one point for each empty box. The object is to get the lowest score possible. Here is an example of how you might start.
T H E R E A L W O R L D O S S E S A M E S T R E E T R
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Answer Key Fill the Squares Answers will vary. Here is one solution to the puzzle:
N C O V A
S T A R T R E I M D P A S A T U R D A O E N L P S I N E S C R O A P H Y P R Y T H E V A M P N O S
K N Y N I P D B L U B S E A L
B B I O G R G B U F F I R E R O T H E X T R E M E M A K E O V E R R
T O D A Y S H O W U R G H T L I V E R I A V D O I R N G I A S P S L A Y E R F C R E I S E I N F E L N D S
Score: 332
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J E O P A R D Y
Teacher Instructions
Library Scavenger Hunt “Library Scavenger Hunt” is a challenging and absorbing activity that can be used to help students practice or review library research skills. With this scavenger hunt the students do the work ⎯ making up the scavenger hunt list for another team, trying to complete another scavenger hunt list, and checking another team’s answers. It’s fun to offer a prize of some kind to the winning team, or to every team that scores above a certain number of points. Since the game is a scavenger hunt, it’s appropriate that the prizes be “scavenged” prizes. You might bring in garage-sale items yourself, of course. But it’s even more fun to have the students bring in scavenger hunt prizes, the sillier the better. They might bring in “white elephants” from their basements, their lockers, garage sales or second-hand stores. Make a big prize table for all the goodies. When it’s time for prizes, first-place team winners get first choice, second place team members get second choice, and so on. “Library Scavenger Hunt” can be varied, of course, for different age and skill levels. The activity takes four to eight class periods, depending upon the amount of time you want the class to spend. Below are day-by-day instructions for the activity:
Orientation/Review (Two periods or less) If you are completing the “Library Scavenger Hunt” at the beginning of the school year, allow a day or two to have the librarian give the class a library orientation. If you are completing the activity at the end of the school year, you might want to have a short review of how to use the library.
Introduction and Question Preparation (Two or three periods) Before class begins, fill in some interesting topics for items 23-25 on “Categories for the Library Scavenger Hunt” (page 22). Have some fun with this one, choosing very specific topics of all kinds, from important to oddball. For example, you might choose Abraham Lincoln, crocodiles, and polo for one instruction sheet. Another might include Ivan the Terrible, the accordion, and the planet Neptune. Make sure the topics are ones that students will be able to find in the library. Divide your class into teams of three or four students each, giving each team a copy of the team instructions for “Library Scavenger Hunt” (page 21) and “Categories for the Library Scavenger Hunt” (page 22). Go over the instructions with the students. Then take them to the library and let them begin work. At the end of the allotted time, collect a list of scavenger hunt questions from each group, along with an accompanying answer sheet. Scan the questions to be sure all the questions are
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suitable. (If you have been monitoring the groups as they work, this step won’t be so important. Don’t worry too much if every question isn’t clear. Students may be a lot more receptive, after struggling with imprecise questions, to a follow-up lesson or discussion about writing clearly.)
The Scavenger Hunt (One or two periods) Give every team a new list of scavenger hunt questions ⎯ in other words, a list other than the one the group prepared. Explain that students have the next one (or two) periods to complete as many of the scavenger hunt questions as possible. Then turn them loose in the library.
Checking (One period) Give each team’s scavenger hunt answer sheet to the team that originally prepared the questions. Have each team use the answer sheet it originally prepared to check the answers and come up with a final score, allowing four points per correct answer, with two points for answers that are partially correct. (Before checking begins, it’s a good idea to talk about being reasonable. For example, if the correct answer is the color “scarlet,” a team should count “red” or “ruby” as correct. If the correct answer is “in a lake,” the team should also allow credit for answers like “in a large body of water.”) When the team has finished scoring a paper, the paper should be given back to the team who completed it, with the answer sheet, to see if there are objections to any of the decisions in checking. Allow time to handle any disputes, and then post the final scores for each team. Finally, award your “scavenged” prizes.
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Team Instructions
Library Scavenger Hunt With this scavenger hunt, your team will play two roles. First, you will be the “writers,” creating a scavenger hunt question list for another team to complete. Then you will act as “hunters,” completing a scavenger hunt question list created by another team. It is important that your team members work together, that you are accurate in your work, and that you follow directions carefully. Here are the steps you will follow:
Orientation/Review Your class will learn about the library ⎯ or review what you have already learned.
Preparing Questions Your team will write 25 questions for another team to answer later on. However, these can’t be just any questions. They must fit the categories on the next page, and they must be typed or copied neatly. You must also prepare a separate answer sheet. The answer sheet must include the exact place where each answer can be found.
Example Answer: Thailand (1994 Information Please Almanac, page 270).
The Scavenger Hunt Your team will receive a list of questions from another team. Your task will be to answer correctly as many questions as possible in the time allowed, using the library. The winning group will be the group that answers the most questions correctly.
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Name
Categories for the Library Scavenger Hunt 1. A question that can be answered by using the card catalog (or computer) 2. A question that can be answered by using an unabridged dictionary or a specialized dictionary 3. A question that can be answered by using an encyclopedia 4. A question that can be answered by using an almanac 5. A question that can be answered by using an atlas 6. A question that can be answered by using a biographical reference book 7. A question that can be answered by using a magazine 8. A question that can be answered by using the Internet 9. A question about geography 10. A question about art 11. A question about music 12. A question about movies 13. A question about history 14. A question about nature 15. A question about an author 16. A question about sports 17. A question about a famous person 18. A question about any subject that begins with the letter m 19. A question about the Bill of Rights 20. A question about an animal 21. A question about a war 22. A question about a food 23. A question about 24. A question about 25. A question about
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Scrambles Each box below contains scrambled letters. The letters in each box can be arranged and rearranged to spell four different words. See if you can find all of them.
T E D I
P S N I
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
I E T M
E T S A
Make some scrambles of your own, below: ___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
___ ___ ___ ___
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Answer Key Scrambles diet edit tide tied spin pins snip nips time mite emit item east seat teas eats
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Teacher Instructions
Chris Rock Meets the Slimy Rubber Band Monster in the Center of Mom’s Microwave For a Halloween writing challenge, try having students write fill-in-the-blank paragraphs. First, have each student write down, on a slip of paper, an item that fits each of the following categories: 1. The name of a person ⎯ someone famous or someone known to the class. 2. An interesting adjective that could be used in front of the word monster. (Examples: specific words like wart-covered and slippery, rather than general words like ugly and scary.) 3. A specific, interesting noun. (Examples: kitchen faucet, shoestrings, dust bunnies, rather than boy or clothes.) 4. A specific place in your city or town. (Example: on the drain at the bottom of the swimming pool, rather than just the pool.) (Note: It is a good idea to mention that all words should, of course, be appropriate for class. Having students put their names on the papers also helps guard against inappropriate language.) Now, have the students pass in their slips of paper. Place all the slips in a paper bag. Explain that each row of students will receive a different assignment, according to the slips of paper drawn out of the bag. Then begin drawing. Choose a #1 item from the first slip, a #2 item from the second, and so forth, until the first row has a set of four different items. List the items on the board, and then begin drawing for the next row. When each row has a list of four items, you can explain what the students are going to do with their designated lists. They are to write a descriptive paragraph or two (you set the limits) on this topic: (Item #1) meets the (Item #2) (Item #3) Monster at (Item #4). For example, one result might be this: Chris Rock meets the slimy Rubber Band Monster in the center of Mom’s microwave. In other words, students will be writing a description of a meeting between a person and a monster at a designated place. Of course, the paragraphs may have to be fairly outlandish in order to incorporate what may be some bizarre characters and circumstances, but that’s all right. Part of the fun is the challenge of this assignment. Sharing results is very important. One effective method is to have each row meet as a group to share paragraphs. The students can then choose the one or two papers they would most like the rest of the class to hear.
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Name
Questions, Questions We are all used to answering questions ⎯ or trying to. For a change of pace, try coming up with the questions instead of the answers. Be creative as you think of three questions you could ask to receive each answer below.
Example The answer is disgusting. The questions are: •
How do you describe a piece of lasagna that sat, forgotten, in a plastic container at the back of the refrigerator for two months?
•
What word describes the frog I had to dissect in biology class?
•
How does my mother describe the state of my room whenever she has to go near it?
1. The answer is empty. 2. The answer is red. 3. The answer is scratchy. 4. The answer is puppy. 5. The answer is tired. 6. The answer is wonderful. 7. The answer is commercials. 8. The answer is friends. 9. The answer is not on your life. 10. The answer is questions.
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Answer Key Questions, Questions Answers will vary. Here are some possibilities: 1. How does my stomach feel during second period math class? How did I feel when my best friend moved away? How do you describe an airhead’s brain? 2. How do you describe Jack’s face when the teacher read the love note he was sending to Katy? What did I see when my brother told me he ripped my favorite sweater? What color did you turn in church when someone made an embarrassing noise and you were trying not to laugh? 3. How do my mom’s old Neil Diamond records sound? What kind of throat makes you want to grab a cup of hot tea? How do chicken pox make you feel? 4. Happiness is a warm what? What makes me smile as soon as I open the door at home after school? How does my mom describe the love I feel for Allison? 5. How do you feel after listening to your Aunt Martha tell about her Tupperware party, again? What describes a car with wheels on it? How do you feel immediately upon hearing that someone needs help with the dishes? 6. What is a snow day? How does your favorite T-shirt feel when you take it out of the dryer? What word would you like to see at the top of your report, instead of “needs work”? 7. What makes your thumb start moving on the remote control? What do you wish wouldn’t include embarrassing subjects when you are watching T.V. with members of the opposite sex? What makes you wish you had an unlimited supply of money? 8. Who can you count on to stand by you through thick or thin? Who doesn’t laugh (at least much!) when you drop chocolate pudding in your lap? Who sometimes gets you in trouble when they sit too close to you in class? 9. Do you prefer fat free peach yogurt to Haagen-Daz chocolate fudge swirl? Would your mom let you have a pet boa constrictor? Wouldn’t you like your parents to be the chaperones for the school dance? 10. What do my parents give me before and after I go to a party? What can you count on getting from your teacher if your mind wanders during class? What do little kids never run out of?
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Name
Alphabet Trade Names 1. Begin writing the letters of the alphabet down the left-hand side of a piece of paper, skipping a couple of lines after each letter. When you run out of room, continue to a new sheet of paper. When you have the entire alphabet written, you are ready to begin the game. 2. The object of the game is to find trade names that begin with each letter of the alphabet. What is a trade name? It is the commercial name of a product, or of the company that makes the product. For example, “Fruit Loops” is a trade name, and so is “Kellogg,” the name of the company that makes the cereal. However, “corn flakes” and “oatmeal” are not trade names. When you think of a trade name that begins with a certain letter, write that trade name beside the appropriate letter. For example, you could write “Fruit Loops” beside the “F” or “Kellogg” beside the “K.” (Don’t use these two examples, though. You will need to think of your own.) 3. When you have one trade name for each letter, A-Z, you have completed the basics of the game ⎯ almost. There is one more requirement: You must be sure that you have included at least one trade name from each of the categories below: medicines cars appliances pet foods
beauty products soaps toys or games
candy bars cereals things to wear
4. When you finish the basics, you have earned 50 points. Then you may go on to earn bonus points by thinking of more than one trade name for each letter. You will receive one bonus point for each extra trade name you write down. See if you or your group can earn the highest score in the time allotted.
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Answer Key Alphabet Trade Names Answers will vary. Here are some possibilities: Advil Bayer Coca-Cola Doc Martens Energizer Frosted Flakes Gerber Hershey Ivory Jergens Kleenex Luvs Maytag Nissan Oil of Olay Purina Quaker State Motor Oil Rolaids Scrabble Tide United Airlines Vaseline Woolite Xerox Yellow Freight Zenith
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Name
Xtra! Xtra! Part A The words defined below all contain the letter x. Following the definitions is an “X Word Bank” that includes all of the answers, plus many other x words. Study the list carefully to select the best word for each definition. Draw a line through each word in the word bank as you use it. 1. to show _________________________________________________________________ 2. wind instrument ___________________________________________________________ 3. to surpass ________________________________________________________________ 4. a bleach _________________________________________________________________ 5. to confuse _______________________________________________________________ 6. smoked salmon ___________________________________________________________ 7. harmful to health __________________________________________________________ 8. colorless gas _____________________________________________________________ 9. dictionary _______________________________________________________________ 10. to give and receive ________________________________________________________ 11. two identical parts under one roof _____________________________________________ 12. to leave out ______________________________________________________________
X Word Bank approximate duplex exchange exist maximum oxygen proxy taxes
axes exalt exclude index next peroxide quixotic vixen
boxing exams exert lexicon noxious perplex saxophone xylophone
complex exceed exhibit lox oxen plexus sixty
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Part B The answers to the words defined below can also be found in the “X Word Bank.” However, you must do some revising. Study the words you haven’t used. By dropping an x and rearranging the remaining letters, you will find the answers. 1. number __________________________
6. a story __________________________
2. period of time ____________________
7. bench, chair ______________________
3. location _________________________
8. to eat ___________________________
4. body of water ____________________
9. climbing plant ____________________
5. alike ____________________________
10. pine, for example __________________
Part C See if you can recall some names spelled with an x. 1. a former U.S. President _____________________________________________________ 2. a baseball team ___________________________________________________________ 3. popular elasticized fabric ___________________________________________________ 4. a girl’s name _____________________________________________________________ 5. two states ________________________________________________________________
Part D In the space below, see if you can add five more items to the Part C exercise.
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Answer Key Xtra! Xtra! Part A 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12.
exhibit saxophone exceed peroxide perplex lox noxious oxygen lexicon exchange duplex exclude
Part B 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
ten (next) eon (oxen) site (exist) sea (axes) same (exams) tale (exalt) seat (taxes) dine (index) vine (vixen) tree (exert)
Part C 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Richard Nixon White Sox or Red Sox spandex Maxine Texas, New Mexico
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Name
Those Disagreeable G’s Have you ever noticed how many sometimes-unpleasant words begin with G? Using the definitions that follow, see if you can complete the G words below. When you have the puzzle completed correctly, the boxed letters will spell out the name of a Halloween song. 1.
me with a spoon!
G __ __
2. Member of a group of criminals.
G __ __ __ __ __ __ __
3. Blood and
G __
4. It haunts.
G
5. Selfish; wanting it all.
G __ __
6. Grit and
G __ __
7. A frame for hanging criminals.
G __ __
8. Often thrown at the enemy during war.
G __ __
c
c
__
__ __ __
c __ __ c __ __ c __ __ c __ __ __
9. A word teenagers use to describe anything G __ __ c __
they don’t like.
c __
10. Someone who makes a pig of himself or herself.
G __ __ __
11. Horrible; repulsive.
G __ __
12. Something people hate to take out.
G __
13. A gnome that causes things to go wrong.
G __ __
14. What a vampire won’t stay in.
G __
c
__ __
G __
c
__
c
c __
__
__ __ __
__ __ __ __
c __
__ __
16. What someone might do if confronted by King Kong.
c
16. A knife might make one.
G __ __
17. It shoots.
G __ __
18. Crabby or cranky.
G __ __ __ __ __ __
19. You might have to have a leg cut off if this sets in.
G __ __ __ __ __ __ __
20. It cuts off heads.
G __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __
The Halloween Song is
__ __ __
__ __ __ __ __ __ __
__ __ __ __
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Answer Key Those Disagreeable G’s 1. GAG 2. GANGSTER 3. GUTS 4. GHOST 5. GREEDY 6. GRIME 7. GALLOWS 8. GRENADE 9. GROSS 10. GLUTTON 11. GRUESOME 12. GARBAGE 13. GREMLIN 14. GRAVE 15. GASP 16. GASH 17. GUN 18. GROUCHY 19. GANGRENE 20. GUILLOTINE The Halloween Song is “The Monster Mash.”
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Name
Winter Directions: Make up categories and list them along the left side of the game, in the boxes provided. You may choose any categories at all that are appropriate for class. (Examples: cartoon characters, six-letter words, things that are sweet, etc.) Be creative in choosing your categories! For each category along the left, think of an appropriate item that begins with the letter at the top of the column. Then think of an item from that category that ends with the letter at the top of the column. Score one point for each item you correctly fill in. The first line is completed for you, as an example. Category
W
I
N
T
E
R
Score
Colors
white yellow
indigo kiwi
nude brown
teal Violet
ecru periwinkle
red Umber
12
Total Score
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Answer Key Winter Answers will vary. Here is one possible solution: Category
W
I
N
T
E
R
Score
Fruits
watermelon honeydew
Italian tomato kiwi
nectarine lemon
tangerine apricot
elderberry lime
raspberry pear
12
Sandwich Fixin’s
watercress coleslaw
ice cream pepperoni
nuts chicken
tomato liverwurst
eggs cheese
roast beef butter
12
Musical Instruments
whistle saw
idiophone timpani
Nickelodeon accordion
trumpet clarinet
electric guitar oboe
recorder guitar
12
Ice Cream Flavors
Wavy Gravy marshmallow
Irish Crème spumoni
Neapolitan butter pecan
tin roof peppermint
English toffee chocolate
rocky road rootbeer
12
Things to Wear
watch bow
ice skate bikini
nylons pin
T-shirt bracelet
earrings necklace
ring sweater
12
Types of Dogs
Weimaraner chow
Irish setter Shar-Pei
Newfoundland Dalmatian
terrier mutt
English setter collie
rottweiler schnauzer
12
Cities
Walla Walla Barrow
Indianapolis Cotaxi
North Fork Jackson
Toledo Flint
Everett Rifle
Richmond Sweetwater
12
5-Letter Names
Wally Turow
Isaac Patti
Nancy Susan
Trina Trent
Ethan Marie
Ralph Tyler
12
Total Score
96
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Name
Diamond Stories See if you can write a short story in diamond form. The first line of the story should consist of one word, the second line of two words, the third line of three words, and so on. Each line should be a complete sentence. Continue until you have reached at least ten or eleven words in a line. Then begin to shorten your lines, one word at a time, until you have only one word left. Here is an example of a diamond story: “Stop!” Bill froze. “Who goes there?” “Bill Jacobs Johnson, sir.” “You’re supposed to be inside!” “I understand that, sir, but I . . . .” “Don’t you obey the rules around here?” “Yes, but I’m on an important mission, sir.” “What kind of mission would have you sneaking about?” “Well, sir it’s a . . . it’s a mercy mission, top secret.” “I’ve heard that before,” the officer said, pulling out his wallet. Bill stared at the officer when he handed him money. “Bill, you are on the usual mercy mission, right?” “I don’t think I should say more, sir.” “Aren’t you going to town for pizzas?” “I didn’t know you knew about . . . .” “We have awful grub, Bill.” Bill smiled. “Your order?” “Make mine pepperoni.” “Yes, sir!” “Go!”
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Name
A+ All clues below identify a word that has at least one a in it. The first letter is provided for you. See if you can fill in the blanks. 1. letters 2. fruit 3. flower 4. gemstone 5. animal 6. story 7. wager 8. hinder 9. question 10. wild dog 11. animal 12. smallest 13. keep up 14. country 15. musical 16. food 17. bird 18. contest 19. Iowa, Texas 20. late 21. used for rain 22. holiday 23. rich 24. uses radiation 25. 52 weeks 26. silly
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ B __ __ __ __ __ C __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ D __ __ __ __ __ __ E __ __ __ __ __ __ __ F __ __ __ __ G __ __ __ __ __ H __ __ __ __ __ I __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ J __ __ __ __ __ K __ __ __ __ __ __ __ L __ __ __ __ M __ __ __ __ __ __ __ N __ __ __ __ __ O __ __ __ __ P __ __ __ __ Q __ __ __ __ R __ __ __ S __ __ __ __ __ T __ __ __ __ U __ __ __ __ __ __ __ V __ __ __ __ __ __ __ W __ __ __ __ __ __ X __ __ __ Y __ __ __ Z __ __ __ A
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Answer Key A+ 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26.
alphabet banana carnation diamond elephant fable gamble hamper interrogate jackal kangaroo least maintain nation opera pizza quail race states tardy umbrella vacation wealthy x-ray year zany
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Name
Thanksgiving There are many words hidden in the word Thanksgiving. See if you can find a word that fits each definition below. Remember, you may use only the letters in Thanksgiving for your answers. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28.
What Jack Sprat’s wife was not _______________________________________________ The opposite of that ________________________________________________________ Precedes you in a kind of note you must write after Christmas_______________________ Another name for a witch____________________________________________________ Children often do this by their knees at recess ___________________________________ A helping verb ____________________________________________________________ Opposite of hers ___________________________________________________________ What your mother says you should never do to your brother ________________________ A bald person often likes to wear one __________________________________________ What you drop when Christmas or a birthday is coming up _________________________ In the olden days, naughty boys often dipped pigtails in this ________________________ They love picnics _________________________________________________________ What you should do before you borrow your brother’s favorite sweater _______________ You probably feel that your parents and teachers do this to you______________________ Relatives_________________________________________________________________ What a skunk does _________________________________________________________ What your teacher wants you to do when you come into the room____________________ A kind of carpet that needs raking ____________________________________________ You never want to commit one of these_________________________________________ You can carry a lot of stuff if you drive one of these ______________________________ Several people might act in one of these ________________________________________ If you didn’t have this, your insides would fall out ________________________________ What the kids did when the birthday cake was brought out _________________________ It might have a name like Sharks or Bruisers ____________________________________ Your teachers and parents always tell you to do this before you act ___________________ Cars need it_______________________________________________________________ Ant bites do this ___________________________________________________________ The Titanic did this ________________________________________________________
Now see if you can find five more words hidden in the word Thanksgiving, and write definitions for them. See if other class members can find the answers to your definitions.
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Answer Key Thanksgiving 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28.
thin this thank hag hang is (or has) his hit hat hint ink ants ask nag kin stink sit shag sin van skit skin sang gang think gas sting sank
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Name
Changing Around One word in each item below is in capital letters. Change one letter in that word (and switch letters about, if needed) to fill in the second blank. Then change another letter in order to fill in the third blank.
Example Last spring, it was COLD and damp, and patches of M O L D began to appear on the ground, even on well-drained L O A M It was so cold and damp that it was unpleasant to R O A M about the grounds. 1. I just LOVE Mark’s tall tales. He was the one who told us about the woman who discovered a major __ __ __ __ of __ __ __ __ on his grandfather’s ranch. Although I didn’t believe him, it was a __ __ __ __ story. 2. Bill FARE shouted __ __ __ __! No one reacted, though, because he has paid a __ __ __ __ every year for the last __ __ __ __ years for doing the same thing. He has an overactive imagination. 3. Justin is NEAT. He is a good student and a __ __ __ __ captain. He’s also very responsible, even in his social life. For example, he has never once been __ __ __ __ for a __ __ __ __. 4. Katie is not a very good COOK, but she always looks __ __ __ __, even when things aren’t going well. Once she used a pile of real __ __ __ __ instead of charcoal. The fire got so hot, she singed the __ __ __ __ on her collar. She kept smiling, though. 5. Sara likes to SING. She gets a big __ __ __ __ on her face whenever she gets the opportunity to perform. Sometimes when she walks down the hall at school, she bursts into song. Her embarrassed friends say, “Please get a __ __ __ __ on yourself!” Sara won’t listen, though. Her friends just have to __ __ __ __ their teeth and put up with her outbursts. Now add five items of your own to this puzzle. You may start with any words that you like, but here are some suggestions: mist, brat, robe, drum, goat, hill, sack, pest, wars.
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Answer Key Changing Around 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
LOVE, lode, gold, good FARE, fire, fine, five (or nine) NEAT, team, late, date COOK, cool, coal, lace SING, grin, grip, grit
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Name
One Step at a Time To answer each question below, follow the instructions below it very carefully, one step at a time. If you follow the instructions precisely, you will be able to write the answer to each question in the space provided.
A. Question: What do you call a lion who chases camels across the desert?
Answer:
______________________________________________________________ SAM AND YOLANDA READ ABOUT SCALAWAGS
1. Look at the sentence written in capital letters above. Cross out all the letters except the first in each proper name. 2. Cross out the word that can be pronounced two different ways. 3. Cross out the word that contains the first and second letters of the alphabet. 4. Cross out the first, third, seventh and eighth letters in the longest word. 5. The letters that are left spell the answer to the question above. Print them in the space provided.
B. Question: What English word has the most letters?
Answer:
______________________________________________________________ GAIL FREDERICKS BOUGHT BOB AN OX.
1. Look at the sentence written in capital letters above. Cross out the first two-letter word. 2. Cross out the longest proper noun. 3. Cross out the shortest proper noun. 4. Cross out all letters except the first in the verb. 5. Change the G in the girl’s name to the thirteenth letter of the alphabet. 6. The letters that are left spell the answer to the question. Print them on the spaces provided.
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C. Question: What gift made the bald man exclaim, “I’ll never part with it”?
Answer:
_______________________________________________________________
MR. GLOCK INSTALLED A COMBINATION LOCK ON MY LOCKER. 1. Look at the sentence written in capital letters above. Cross out the two rhyming words. 2. Cross out the word in past tense. 3. Cross out the abbreviation. 4. Cross out the prepositional phrase. 5. Cross out the last seven letters in the four-syllable word. 6. The letters that are left spell the answer to the question. Print them in the space provided.
D. Challenge. See if you can construct your own one-step-at-a-time puzzle, building the puzzle around a riddle of your choice. Warning: This will not be an easy task!
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Answer Key One Step at a Time A. B. C. D.
Sandy Claws Mailbox A comb Answers will vary
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Name
Holiday Anagrams There are 40 terms associated with the holidays hidden below. Unscramble the letters in each item so that you spell a holiday word (or words). The first item is done for you. (Note: the items with stars have answers of two or more words.) gifts ___________________________
21. slelb __________________________
2. direrene _________________________
22. wlefaksons _____________________
3. lohyl ___________________________
23. yetruk _________________________
4. sgakpace ________________________
24. skoicoe ________________________
5. arthew __________________________
25. gilhes _________________________
6. anlutscasa _____________________
26. ringecradtge __________________
7. gicksnot _________________________
27. inbrob _________________________
8. incragol _________________________
28. swob __________________________
9. evraysweene ___________________
29. veels __________________________
10. unslotsoire _______________________
30. capetinemime ________________
11. novatica _________________________
31. grishan ________________________
12. shetramstrice ___________________
32. erd ___________________________
13. tremanson _______________________
33. teerapreetgrainridap ___________
14. polrhud _________________________
34. ecape _________________________
15. snetli ___________________________
35. dayaccnen ___________________
16. toilteems ________________________
36. otintapies ______________________
17. gliths ___________________________
37. splugrumas __________________
18. snestrep _________________________
38. ogresco ________________________
19. lopethorn ______________________
39. gnere _________________________
20. geggon __________________________
40. veergeren ______________________
1. stifg
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Answer Key Holiday Anagrams 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40.
gifts reindeer holly packages wreath Santa Claus stocking caroling New Year’s Eve resolutions vacation Christmas tree ornaments Rudolph tinsel mistletoe lights presents North Pole eggnog
bells snowflakes turkey cookies sleigh greeting card ribbon bows elves mincemeat pie sharing red partridge in a pear tree peace candy cane poinsettia sugar plums Scrooge green evergreen
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Name
Ded Cat Directions: As you rewrite Ded Cat, see if you can find and correct all 79 spelling errors.
Ded Cat An urbun ledgend is a storie told over and over, in many diffrent forms, all over the countrey ⎯ or even the wourld. Peopel tell the story, beleiving it to be ture, but know one has ever been able to track down the acshual peopel involved. The storie always hapened to “my best freind’s brother’s ex-grilfreind” or to “a freind of my mother’s boss,” or to “a freind of a freind.” Here is one vershun of an urbun ledgend called “Ded Cat”: A man and a women went shoping together, and the man desided to by his wife the beauteful blowse she fell in love with at an expensive store. She was thrilled, hapily carring the blowse to the car in the bag provided by the store. Then the cuple desided to stop at a restraunt too eat. They got out of there car and started to go inside, but then they saw a ded cat in the parcking lot. “Oh deer,” said the women. “We can’t just leave the pore thing there. Someone might run over it again.” The man agreed. They were both cat lovers and thouhgt the aminal decerved a desent berial. He thought a moment, then took the blowse out of the bag from the expensive store and replaced it with the ded cat. Then he put the bag on the hood of the car while he and his wife went in to eat. They planned to take the ded cat home with them later and bery it. Another women walking passed the car saw the bag on the hood. Quikly, she looked around to see if anywone was looking. Then she picked up the bag and casualy caried it into the restraunt. She ordered a ham and cheeze samwich and sat down to eat. Curiousity got the best of her, and finly she desided to peek inside the bag. When se saw the ded cat, she fainted. The maneger caled an ambulanse and help soon arived. The ambulanse atendents put the women on a strecher, along with her purse. As she was being loded up into the ambulanse, the bag contaning the ded cat sat on her stomack.
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Answer Key The Ded Cat Dead Cat An urban legend is a story told over and over, in many different forms, all over the country ⎯ or even the world. People tell the story, believing it to be true, but no one has ever been able to track down the actual people involved. The story always happened to “my best friend’s brother’s ex-girlfriend” or to “a friend of my mother’s boss,” or to “a friend of a friend.” Here is one version of an urban legend called “Dead Cat”: A man and a woman went shopping together, and the man decided to buy his wife the beautiful blouse she fell in love with at an expensive store. She was thrilled, happily carrying the blouse to the car in the bag provided by the store. Then the couple decided to stop at a restaurant to eat. They got out of their car and started to go inside, but then they saw a dead cat in the parking lot. “Oh dear,” said the woman. “We can’t just leave the poor thing there. Someone might run over it again.” The man agreed. They were both cat lovers and thought the animal deserved a decent burial. He thought a moment, then took the blouse out of the bag from the expensive store and replaced it with the dead cat. Then he put the bag on the hood of the car while he and his wife went in to eat. They planned to take the dead cat home with them later and bury it. Another woman walking past the car saw the bag on the hood. Quickly, she looked around to see if anyone was looking. Then she picked up the bag and casually carried it into the restaurant. She ordered a ham and cheese sandwich and sat down to eat. Curiosity got the best of her, and finally she decided to peek inside the bag. When she saw the dead cat, she fainted. The manager called an ambulance, and help soon arrived. The ambulance attendants put the woman on a stretcher, along with her purse. As she was being loaded up into the ambulance, the bag containing the dead cat sat on her stomach.
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Name
Nouns, Nouns, Everywhere Nouns The short paragraph below contains twenty nouns. One of them has been written in bold and also copied into the puzzle grid. See if you can find and circle the rest of the nouns in the paragraph; then put all of the nouns in their proper places in the grid. (Hint: Putting the words in their proper places in the grid is not as easy as it looks!) Marcy liked pizza. In fact, it was her favorite snack. She liked thick crusts better than the thin and crispy type, but she wasn’t really fussy. She would eat either kind if it had big gobs of cheese. She always ordered extra toppings, like pepperoni, Italian sausage, black olives, green peppers, onions and mushrooms. She usually washed the whole thing down with a quart of pop. She had a big appetite!
C R U S T S
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Answer Key Nouns, Nouns, Everywhere Nouns Marcy liked pizza. In fact, it was her favorite snack. She liked thick crusts better than the thin and crispy type, but she wasn’t really fussy. She would eat either kind if it had big gobs of cheese. She always ordered extra toppings, like pepperoni, Italian sausage, black olives, green peppers, onions and mushrooms. She usually washed the whole thing down with a quart of pop. She had a big appetite!
P I Z
C
Z
F
S
O
A
N
U
I
S
O
A
N
N
T
S
D
S
G
O
B
M A R
C
A
C
Y
R K L
I
V
E
U
P
S
E O
P
P
E
M U
S H R
Q
O
U
N P
E
T
R T
Y
E
P
E
E
R S E
I
E
P
P
H
N G S
P
E
A
P
T
I
P O
O M S P
N A
T
E
C K
H
I
N G
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Teacher Instructions
Martians vs. Earthlings “Martians vs. Earthlings” is a game that is perfect for the last month of school. It is active, yet it has the very attractive feature (to teachers!) of requiring silence from most players. It takes thinking, creativity and ingenuity on the part of the students. It also involves communication ⎯ though of the non-verbal kind. With luck, the game may even give students more appreciation for the role language plays in our world.
Materials You will need a timer, one that rings, beeps, buzzes or makes some other kind of noise. You will also need to prepare some flash cards ahead of time. A list of possible topics for the cards is on the next page.
Playing the Game When students come into class, have them draw numbers that designate them as Martians, Earthlings or Zelbotian Rulers. There should be only four or five Zelbotian Rulers, with the rest of the class divided equally between Martians and Earthlings. Thus, a class of 35 might have five Zelbotian Rulers, 15 Earthlings and 15 Martians. Explain that a space-traveling team of Earthlings and a space-traveling team of Martians have simultaneously had mechanical difficulties and landed on an unknown planet, a planet that has room for only one more group of beings. The planet’s Zelbotian Rulers must decide which group to allow to stay and which group to toss back into outer space ⎯ a very dangerous alternative. The Zelbotian Rulers have decided to keep the group that proves itself to be the best at communicating. However, there’s a problem. The Zelbotian Rulers understand neither Martian nor English and, in fact, become quite irritated by the sound of either language. The Martians and Earthlings must find ways to communicate without using language, according to the following test: •
The teams will take turns trying to communicate the meaning of different words on flashcards to the Zelbotian Rulers. The teams must communicate with each other and with the Zelbotian Rulers entirely without using spoken or written language.
•
Because the Zelbotian Rulers hate the sound of languages they don’t understand, the Earthlings will lose a point every time anyone in their group speaks, and the Martians will lose a point every time any Martian speaks. The same goes for any kind of written communication.
•
The Zelbotian Rulers will flip a coin to see which team goes first. Then, the designated card holder (the teacher) will hold up a flash card to that team. That team will have one minute to try to communicate the word to the Zelbotian Rulers.
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For example, if the flashcard says “love,” the team members will do all they can to get the Zelbotian Rulers to say “love.” If the Zelbotian Rulers guess the correct word before the timer sounds, the communicating team will gain one point. Yes, the Zelbotian Rulers get to speak. Their scientists have developed a device called the transmitifier, which allows their language to be understood by anyone who hears it, no matter what the person’s native language. Thus the Martians will hear what the Zelbotian Rulers say as Martian, and the Earthlings will hear whatever the Zelbotian Rulers say as English. The Earthlings and Martians can’t use language at all, even to communicate with each other. Therefore, they may find it difficult to determine how to proceed in trying to communicate a word to the Zelbotian Rulers. It will take cooperation and creativity for a group to work together effectively. •
At the end of one minute, play goes to the next team. The card holder holds up a new card, and then the new team has one minute to communicate the word to the Zelbotian Rulers.
•
Points are kept, even when a team goes into negative numbers. If a team has 0 points and someone speaks, the team will then have minus 1 point.
Possible Topics love • hamburgers • taste • smell • ice flower • motorcycle • intelligence • hot slow • hammer • book • words • green newspaper • umbrella • television telephone • numbers • beautiful • star water • fish • calculator • sky • impatience penguin • yellow • mother • temperature paper • drew • carpet • cat • shy • milk rain • skyscraper • rainbow • bus envelope • talk • brave • ocean • hope
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Lipograms Lipograms are sentences that do not contain a particular letter of the alphabet. Create some lipograms by rewriting the sentences below. Eliminate all the a’s in Sentence #1, the b’s in Sentence #2, and the c’s in Sentence #3. In rewriting the sentences you may substitute words, add words, or subtract words. However, you may not alter the basic meaning to the sentence.
Example Create a lipogram by rewriting the following sentence to eliminate the letter t: Robert really liked to read cartoons on Saturday and Sunday mornings.
Bob loved reading comics on weekend mornings
Sentence #1 (Eliminate the letter a.) Richard adored the food of France, and he ate custards or pastries regularly while he was there.
Sentence #2 (Eliminate the letter b.) Elizabeth bought light brown book covers for all but two of her best books of fiction, and dark blue covers for all her school books.
Sentence #3 (Eliminate the letter c.) Children can create colorful scenes on paper, using only their creativity and basic supplies like watercolors and oils.
Now create some lipogram puzzles of your own to share with the class. Be sure to include a possible solution to each puzzle.
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Answer Key Lipograms Answers will vary. Here are some possibilities:
Sentence #1: Rick loved French food, consuming rich desserts often when he visited the country.
Sentence #2: Liz purchased tan covers for all except two of her favorite novels, and navy covers for all of her school texts.
Sentence #3: Boys and girls are able to make bright drawings using only their imaginations and ordinary paints.
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Name
Holiday Letters Two holiday messages appear on the grid below. See if you can create words associated with the holidays by adding letters before or after each letter in the messages. You may add any number of letters before or after each existing letter below, so long as you don’t run into another word, reading left to right. (You do not need to make words reading top to bottom.) To complete the puzzle, every existing letter below should be part of a new word.
Example R E D C A R O L S F A
L A
L A
H O L I D A Y H A P P Y
C H E E R
N E W
Y E A R
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Answer Key Holiday Letters Answers will vary. Here is one possibility:
R U D O L P H O R N A M E N T S T I N S E L L I G H T S R E D C A N D Y H O L L Y WR E A T H C O O K I E S C A R D S L E I G H P I E E V E R G R E E N P R E G R E E N Y U L T R E E E G G N O G E L F WA S T M I S T N E R E I
U R K E Y L E T O E W Y E A R S N D E E R
S S E N T S E
S A I
E V E
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L
Name
Dictionary Puzzle 1. Of the three words listed below, one is found in a band, one in a lake and one in a jar. Which is which? pickerel piccalilli piccolo 2. How many syllables are in the word duped? 3. What do the following words all have in common: sabot, pump, clog? 4. Add a letter to the word shrew to make a new word that means cunning or tricky. 5. Which word doesn’t belong in this list: skiff, tiff, miffed, rift Why? 6. Can you pillory someone by giving them too many pills? Why or why not? 7. Put the words in the following sentence into alphabetical order: The wicked wizard washed the windows in the wigwam on Wednesday with a washcloth rinsed in windshield wiper fluid.
8. Write one sentence that uses all four of the following words correctly: shrike, tyke, pike, hike.
9. Could a milliner be a miscreant? Why or why not? 10. Write one sentence that uses all three of the following words correctly: euphonious, euphoric, eulogy.
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Answer Key Dictionary Puzzle Pickerel ⎯ lake; piccalilli ⎯ jar; piccolo ⎯ band One All are types of footwear. Shrewd Skiff, because it does not deal with disagreement in any way. No, because to pillory means to expose to ridicule and abuse. A, fluid, in, on, rinsed, the, washcloth, washed, Wednesday, wicked, wigwam, windows, windshield, wiper, with, wizard 8. One possibility: When the tyke took a hike, he saw a shrike and caught a pike. 9. It’s possible. A milliner makes hats. A miscreant behaves criminally or viciously. A hatmaker could be a villain at the same time. 10. One possibility: The minister’s voice was so euphonious during his eulogy that some of the listeners actually forgot their grief and became euphoric. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
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Happy Trails Part A Each four-letter word defined below can be spelled from the letters found in trails. The last letter of one answer becomes the first letter of the next answer. You may use the letters as often as you wish, in any order. 1
2
3
4
5
1. Hindmost part of an animal 2. Opposite of first 3. To lean or slant 4. Antonym for short 5. To record items 6. To work the soil 7. Untruthful person 8. Unpopular rodents 9. The sun, for example 10. Part of a fence 11. Scottish word for girl 12. To talk back (slang) 13. Found beneath a window
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
Part B Write five sentences in which the last letter of one word becomes the first letter in the next.
Example Bob borrowed Diane’s skateboard.
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Answer Key Happy Trails 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13.
tail last tilt tall list till liar rats star rail lass sass sill
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Summer Vacation There are many, many common words that can be formed from the letters in the words summer vacation. See if you can find the 40 three-letter words that can be used to fill the blanks in the story below. Remember: You may use only three-letter words, and all the words must be formed from the letters in summer vacation. In forming words, you may use a letter more than once in a word only if it appears more than once in summer vacation.
Summer Vacation Fairy Tale Once upon a time there was a shy young prince who lived in a kingdom far, far away. Although the prince was shy, he had many talents. He had inherited athletic ability from his Uncle
(1)
, a musical
animals from his Uncle brave as nine or
(2)
from his Uncle
(4)
(6)
, who was a
(7)
(3)
(5)
, and a way with . In addition, the boy was as
put together.
On the summer vacation before the prince’s seventeenth birthday, he fell in love. Unfortunately, he fell in love with Princess ther liked the prince
(8)
(9)
, who was not shy at all. The princess nei-
disliked him. She simply didn’t notice him at all.
The unfortunate prince tried everything to get the princess to notice him. He rented a plane and wrote, “I love you!” in the sy on her big
(11)
(10)
above her castle. She was busy painting a dai-
and didn’t see it.
One night he drove his expensive red
(12)
back and forth in front of the castle,
hoping to impress her. However, the princess was too busy waxing her own brand new
(13)
and didn’t notice. He swam to her canoe one day when she was fishing in
the moat, but she thought he was an alligator and hit him with an his jogging shoes and
(15)
one afternoon, trying to get a
(18)
(17)
(14)
. He put on
(16)
past her when she was lying in the . But she continued to
her strawberries and didn’t even look up as he passed.
One night he climbed the garden wall, tied a love note to a rock, and tried to toss it into her bedroom window. However, his
(19)
was bad. The rock hit the
(20)
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roof of the doghouse below, waking six Doberman pinschers who soon had him on the
(21)
. He leaped over the garden wall and then
(22)
down with his
heart pounding. “Nothing I have tried has worked,” thought the prince. “I know what does
(23)
work. Now I need to know what will work. I think I will ask my
(24) “
(25)
.” Immediately, he got up and went to see her. down, my little Pumpkin,” said the queen. She had called him that since
he was a little tyke. “Get your hair out of your eyes,” she added, “and
(26)
your
right shoe. I swear, you can never keep a shoe tied.” She had talked to him like that since he had started to walk. She had not noticed her little pumpkin was almost a
(27)
.
The prince pushed his hair out of his eyes and tied his shoe. Then he explained his problem. The queen looked thoughtful. Then she said, “I have
(28)
the princess you
love, and she strikes me as the kind of young lady who would appreciate your athletic ability. I’ll find out when she’s going to play tennis with her sister. Then you can arrange to play next to her, and she will be sure to notice how strong and talented you are.” The next Saturday, the prince set out for the tennis courts on his bicycle. His hair was freshly
(29)
and combed, and his hopes were high. Unfortunately, his right shoe,
again, was not tied. As he walked out onto the court, he tripped and fell into the
(30)
.
The prince struggled to his feet, pulled off his shoe, and angrily threw it as far as he could. Embarrassed at both his clumsiness and his bad temper, he took his jacket off and threw it over his head. Then he ran, in one stocking foot, to his bicycle. At last the princess had noticed him. She thought he was some kind of
(31)
.
The prince was ready to give up, but his mother was optimistic. “All right, Pumpkin,” she said. “The princess didn’t appreciate your athletic ability, but I feel certain that she will appreciate your musical ability. You must sing for her. Win her heart with a song. You can do it!” (32) “Well, perhaps I ,” said the prince. “I’ll even write the song myself!” Now, while the prince was quite a good singer, he was not much of a songwriter. In fact, he was a terrible songwriter. His song began like this:
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You’re the one. I love you a
(33)
,
More than my gun. Now kiss me, hon. Then it got even worse. That night, the prince stood under the princess’ window and sang his song. Needless to say, she was not impressed. She threw a shoe at him. The prince returned, dejected, to his mother. “Don’t give up, Pumpkin,” she said. “You have one talent left that I’m sure will impress her ⎯ your talent with animals. Take your
(34)
over and dazzle the princess with all the tricks you have taught the ani-
mal.” So the prince took his talented feline, Fluffy, over to the castle. He climbed the garden wall and once more stood beneath the princess’ window. He had Fluffy walk on her back legs. He had her dance a waltz. When she started slam dancing, even the princess was impressed and came outside for a closer look. Encouraged, the prince rolled out a
(35)
. Fluffy did a back flip into a cart-
wheel. The prince pulled out a large tank and filled it. Fluffy danced along the
(36)
, juggling oranges with her front paws at the same time.
Then, suddenly, a mouse ran across the lawn toward the princess. “Charge!” shouted the prince to Fluffy. “Save her! Save the princess!” Fluffy pounced, and in just an instant she held the mouse in her mouth. “It’s lucky Fluffy was here,” said the prince proudly to the princess. “Whiskers!” cried the princess, pulling the little mouse from the cat’s mouth. “Are you hurt, my poor baby?” She petted the frightened mouse and glared at Fluffy. “You animal!” she shouted. “It is a
(37)
to harm a fellow creature like my Whiskers.” She
turned to the prince. “And you!” She gave him a dark and terrible look. “I never want you to
(38)
foot on these grounds again! Get out, and stay out!”
The prince left. He never spoke to the princess again. He never spoke to anyone again, all summer long. Fluffy sat around moping, refusing to dance or to do back flips. The queen sat around worrying, trying to figure out why the prince winced whenever she called him “Pumpkin.” Unfortunately, not all fairy tales have a happy ending. *****
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Note: Five years later, the prince
(39)
a magic marshmallow, which made him
get over his shyness. Luckily, princesses all over the world began to notice him. That’s where you come in. Tell what happened next, using at least 25 words, each four letters long, that can be made from the letters in SUMMER VACATION. Be sure to underline each of the 25 words you use in your story. Perhaps your fairy tale will have a happy ending!
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Answer Key Summer Vacation Note: There may be more than one correct answer for many of the items. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39.
Tim ear Tom Sam vet ten men Sue nor air toe car van oar ran sun tan eat aim tin
run sat not mom sit tie man met cut net nut can ton cat mat rim sin set ate
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Name
Hearts and Flowers Sometimes things that are not alike really do have something in common, if you look hard enough. For example, you might think that a train and a pizza have nothing in common. Yet both of them involve chewing. (You chew a pizza, and a train “choo-choos.”) See if you can think of at least two similarities between each pair of items below. (Note: There is no single, correct solution to this puzzle. Open up your mind to the possibilities!)
1. How is your heart like a school bus?
2. How is love like an algebra test?
3. How is a bouquet of flowers like a goldfish?
4. How is chocolate like a freckle?
5. How is a valentine like a can of Pepsi?
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Answer Key Hearts and Flowers Answers will vary. Here is one possible answer for each item: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Your heart and a school bus: One is a pump, and one needs a pump ⎯ for gasoline. Love and an algebra test: Both can make you very nervous. A bouquet of flowers and a goldfish: Both need water. Chocolate and a freckle: One can cause spots (pimples), and one is a spot. A valentine and a can of Pepsi: Both are sweet.
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Name
Cars Directions: For each category listed along the side of the page, think of an appropriate word that begins with the letter at the top of the page. The first item is done for you.
C Makes of cars
A
R
S
Chevrolet
Adjectives that describe cars Colors of cars
Verbs that tell what a car does Parts of a car
Adverbs that tell how someone might drive a car Cities in America where you might drive a car
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Answer Key Cars Answers will vary, but here is one solution:
Makes of cars
Adjectives that describe cars
C
A
R
S
Chevrolet
Audi
Riviera
Subaru
rented
sleek
cool
awesome
Colors of cars
cream
avocado
red
slver
Verbs that tell what a car does
careen
angle
race
slide
Parts of a car
Camshaft
axle
radiator
speedometer
Adverbs that tell how someone might drive a car
cautiously
adeptly
rudely
safely
Cities in America where you might drive a car
Columbus, Ohio
Amarillo, Texas
Richmond, Virginia
San Francisco, California
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Name
Colors and More Colors For each item below, study the clue at the left. Write your three-letter answer, in order, in the circles at the right. Then, expand your answer by adding letters to spell out the name of a color.
Example a falsehood
1. rock containing metal 2. popular feline pet 3. strike 4. bend at the waist 5. use a shovel 6. large 7. young dog 8. small rug 9. vine 10. on the end of the foot
O
{{
V
{
{ { __ __ __ { __ { { __ __ __ { __ { { { __ { __ { { __ __ __ { { { __ { __ { { __ { { __ { __ __ { { __ __ __ { __ { { __ __ { { __ __ __ __ { __
__
{
Now see if you can add to the puzzle, writing your clues on the left, below, and leaving the correct number of blanks at the right for each answer. Here are some colors you might start with: lemon, burgundy, lavender, yellow, ebony. (Of course, there are many more.) See how far you can expand the puzzle, and be sure to make an answer key.
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Answer Key Colors and More Colors 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
orange scarlet white brown indigo beige purple magenta ivory turquoise
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Name
Diamonds See if you can complete the diamonds below. Here’s how: Add one letter to the letter at the top of each diamond, to make a word. Write that word on the second line of the diamond. Then add another letter to form a new word, rearranging the letters if necessary. Write that word on the third line. Continue to add letters, one at a time, until you can spell the word in the middle of the diamond. Then take away letters, one at a time, forming a new word each time. When you finish, you should have the same letter that’s at the top of the diamond. Note: There is more than one way to complete each diamond.
Example O O N O N E D O N E T O N E D D O N A T E A T O N E N O T E N O T T O O __
A
__
__
I
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ I N S E L T __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ I
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ T R A I N S __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ A
Now create a diamond puzzle of your own, beginning with the letter E. You choose the word for the middle of the puzzle. __
E
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ E
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Answer Key Diamonds Answers will vary. Here is one solution to each diamond:
A A A T
A
S S
T N
T T
N A
R
T
R R
T I
N
A A
A R
S I I
I
N
A A
N N
N N
A
I I T T S T
I
N
I T
I T
N N E
N I
L
I S
L I
S
E
E S
I I
N E
L S
T T
S I
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Name
The Same, The Same Many words ⎯ and a few names ⎯ are spelled the same backward as they are forward. Pep and Anna are two examples. Can you identify 19 more, below? The definitions and letters will help you. 1. Small child
___ O ___
2. Mother
___ O ___
3. Make lace
___ A ___
4. A joke
___ A ___
5. Father
___ A ___
6. Past tense of do
___ I ___
7. Soda
___ O ___
8. Girl’s name
___ A ___
9. Boy’s name
___ O ___
10. Worn under chin
___ I ___
11. Popular fall flower
___ U ___
12. An act
___ E E ___
13. Look
___ E E ___
14. Blow horn
___ O O ___
15. A turning part
___ O ___ O ___
16. Even
___ E ___ E ___
17. Detects distant objects
___ A ___ A ___
18. More red
___ E ___ ___ E ___
19. To direct to a source
___ E ___ E ___
20. The letters in one of the items above can be switched about to spell a boy’s name. It, too, is spelled the same forward as backward. What is the name? _______________________ 21. Add a letter to each pair of e’s below to make more words that are spelled the same backward and forward: E ___ E
E ___ E
E ___ E
E ___ E
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Answer Key The Same, The Same 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21.
TOT MOM TAT GAG DAD DID POP NAN BOB BIB MUM DEED PEEP TOOT ROTOR LEVEL RADAR REDDER REFER OTTO EYE, EKE, EVE, EWE
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Name
Sports See if you can complete the puzzle on the next page, using words from the world of sports. One letter in each word has been filled in for you. The clues to the puzzle are not numbered. If the word you want is six letters long and runs across, look under Across, Six-Letter Words, for a clue. One of the clues in that column will refer to the word you are looking for.
Across
Down
Three-Letter Words A small peg Used to hit a ball Run A baseball score
Three-Letter Words Needed in volleyball To strike Football player Four-Letter Words Type of kick Done with the foot You need clubs for it The “swan,” for example First or third, for example You do this in water Throw
Four-Letter Words Baseball glove A basketball needs one To hit without swinging Played on horseback Five-Letter Words Almost a strike Baseball throw
Five-Letter Words Players don’t want to be there Helpful in skiing or fishing English football Legal interference
Six-Letter Words They prevent slipping Michelle Kwan, for example Done in the Rockies and Alps Baseball judge Played on the field or on the ice The objective in bowling
Six-Letter Words Net game Soccer or hockey defender Oars are necessary
Seven-Letter Words Necessary in a marathon On the forward line A pole is needed
Seven-Letter Words A mask is needed for this position Swords or foils are needed To grapple
Words with 8 or More Letters Court game Shaquille O’Neal plays When the band plays Sometimes transportation for kids Positioned behind the line of scrimmage Sports shoes Football score Great for flips
Words with 8 or more letters Don’t jump out of a plane without one Kind of bars for gymnasts Net game Played on a diamond
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Sports Puzzle To be used with previous page.
T
W
F T
R
R
J
I K
B
H
S
P
L P F I
T
A
R
R T E Q A L
A E
E
F B
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Answer Key Sports
B U N E N C H O C A R P I T O U C W N H M I T T E N R G
T
B A T E N T R U N N I U I J O G S K I B K E Y G O C H L H A L F T I T O U C H U N P S K A T R S N E A K P C P O L O H L U M E E E S K A T E B
S W F I S H I N G E M K N G S T R I K C C I N G B A S K E N O A G A S L I N E M A N I B I M E A L D O WN L V I E O V T R A M P O L E R L R A C Q U E E R S Y B C L E A P I R E L N H A L O A R D
E T H
I T
T
W S P A R E E S T B A L L L E O O P C A K S S B P A A S R N E A L B A L L E L S
F B A C K
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Name
Pluses Each item below begins with a letter that is followed by a definition for a word. Identify the word and add the letter. Then arrange the letters to spell a noun that we can eat. The first item is done for you.
Pluses
Foods
1.
A + another word for boys. ( lads )
2.
O + a verb that means to have life. (
3.
M + the name of a beverage. (
4.
P + a verb that means to jump. (
5.
R + a slang word that means to arrest. (
6.
C + Raggedy Ann’s friend. (
7.
C + a word that means to be wary. (
8.
C + a verb that means to take action. (
9.
B + a golf term. (
) ) )
) ) )
)
10. C + the name of bees’ homes. ( 11. B + a term of affection. ( 12. E + a math term. (
)
) )
)
s
a
l
a
d
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
___
Now see if you can add five items of your own to the puzzle. Use the space below for your definitions and blanks.
Pluses
Foods
13. 14. 15. 16. 17.
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Answer Key Pluses 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12.
(lads) salad (live) olive (tea) meat (leap) apple (nab) bran (Andy) candy (leery) celery (do) cod (tee) beet (hives) chives (dear) bread (pi) pie
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Word Spirals To make a word spiral, first choose a topic. Topics are limited only by your imagination. Here are just a few ideas: animals with four legs, foods that have seeds in them, action verbs, six-letter words, names of people in this class, football teams, words with “x” in them. Make a list of all the words you can think of that fit your topic. Then see how many words you can fit into the spiral, printing one letter per square. The last letter of the first word becomes the first letter of the second word. The last letter of the second word becomes the first letter of the third word, and so forth. Be sure to check your spelling. If you spell even one word incorrectly, your whole puzzle will be “off.” Use a dictionary, and have classmates double-check your work as well.
Example Topic: Synonyms for big
Topic:
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Rhyming Couplets You may have played this game as “Hink Pink,” or you may have heard of it called “Rhymie Stymie.” You may have seen a variation on the theme adapted as a game show on TV. Or you may have seen another variation on the old Tonight Show, where Johnny Carson played Karnak the Magnificent, a mentalist who furnished humorous questions for the answers first provided by Ed McMahan. Whatever name it goes by, “Rhyming Couplets” is a game that will really stretch your mind. The basic game rules are simple: You must find the answer to a question, but the answer must be a rhyming couplet ⎯ a pair of rhymed words.
Examples What do you call milk for Bullwinkle? moose juice What do you call mustard and mayonnaise and butter? spreadable edibles Now try your hand at the following rhyming couplets: 1. What would you call a plundered pyramid? _____________________________________ 2. What would you call an alligator with magical powers? ___________________________ 3. What would you call a cheap, preserved cucumber? ______________________________ 4. What would you call work at a sword-manufacturing plant? ________________________ 5. What would you call a police body search on a cold night? _________________________ 6. What would you call someone who steals a baby’s Huggies? _______________________ 7. What would you call a glass handgun? _________________________________________ 8. What would you call a summer footwear thief ? __________________________________ 9. What would you call a father who has just won a million dollar lottery? ______________ 10. What would you call a problem with flat soda? __________________________________ 11. What would you call a person whose hobby is trying to fix broken automobile turn signals? ___________________________________________________________________ 12. What do you call a musician who only works June-September? _____________________ 13. What would you call a foreman in a barbecue condiment plant? _____________________
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14. What would you call an armored bank vehicle? __________________________________ 15. What would you call an isolated worker bee? ___________________________________ 16. What would you call a robot’s relatives? _______________________________________ 17. What would you call D.D.T.? ________________________________________________ 18. What would you call a celebrity limousine? _____________________________________ 19. What would you call a hospital for pessimists? __________________________________ 20. What would you call a wandering Eskimo? _____________________________________ 21. What would you call an unhappy bowl of hash? _________________________________ 22. What would you call the look you get trying to read very small type? ________________ 23. What do you call a room for holding Japanese currency? __________________________ 24. What do you call a conclusion that’s about to happen? ____________________________ 25. What do you call a sounding burglar alarm? ____________________________________ Now you’ve got the idea. Next try playing “Rhyming Couplets” in a group. Here are two variations of the game: A. With a partner see how many rhyming couplet questions you can write. You get a point for each time you stump the class. (Note: The class may come up with a different answer than the one you intended. If the answer rhymes and answers the question, that’s fine.) B. Join one of two class teams. Each team has fifteen minutes to write rhyming couplet questions for the other team. The teams then take turns trying to stump the other.
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Answer Key Rhyming Couplets 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25.
stripped crypt lizard wizard nickel pickle saber labor brisk frisk diaper swiper crystal pistol sandal vandal happy pappy or glad dad bubble trouble blinker tinker summer drummer or summer strummer sauce boss buck truck lone drone tin kin bug drug star car cynic clinic polar stroller blue stew print squint yen den impending ending crime chime
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Food for Thought The English language often uses the names of foods in everyday expressions. For example, cool and damp hands are called clammy, or a person who shows fear is sometimes called a chicken. See if you can determine the food-related word or phrase that fits each definition below. There are hints at the bottom of the page, if you need them. 1. A phrase used to describe something very simple to do (two answers) ________________ ________________________________________________________________________ 2. A phrase used to describe someone who is very pleased (two answers) _______________ ________________________________________________________________________ 3. Sometimes used to describe a pretty girl’s skin __________________________________ 4. A short person (two answers) ________________________________________________ 5. A complaint ______________________________________________________________ 6. Refusing to talk anymore ___________________________________________________ 7. Used to describe someone a little bit crazy or crazy-acting _________________________ 8. Making the grade; living up to a certain level of performance _______________________ 9. A phrase to describe something practically worthless _____________________________ 10. A car that has everything go wrong with it ______________________________________ 11. A cherished, special person __________________________________________________ 12. A wimpy person __________________________________________________________ 13. To worry and fuss and be angry ______________________________________________ 14. To cheat or bend the truth a bit _______________________________________________ 15. Money (three answers) _____________________________________________________ 16. An appointment ___________________________________________________________ 17. A person who vegetates in front of the television _________________________________ 18. To flatter and praise _______________________________________________________
Hints Two vegetables • a long-cooking meat and vegetable dish • four fruits • a kind of legume • three seafoods • three desserts • a kind of candy • an “extra” for sandwiches • a meat • something that comes in a shell • two dairy products • used for sandwiches • used to create a basic food.
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Answer Key Food for Thought 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18.
easy as pie; a piece of cake happy as a clam; pleased as punch peaches and cream complexion shrimp; sprout beef clamming up nutty cutting the mustard not worth a hill of beans lemon apple of one’s eye cream puff stew fudge dough; bread; clams date couch potato butter up
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Name
In Hiding The word needed to fill in each blank below is hidden in its sentence. Study each sentence carefully. When you rearrange the letters in the right word, in the right order, you will have the answer.
Example The teacher was very distressed to discover a in the back row. (The letters in the word teacher can be rearranged to spell cheater.) 1. The ladies who joined “Save the World” had high _______________________________ . 2. Smith’s lawyers had to hire a detective to find their client’s _______________________ . 3. His words were as sharp as a _______________________________________________ . 4. Close the door, or that awful _______________________________________ will escape. 5. You can’t keep this photo, but you may have a _________________________________ . 6. They gave the board ________________________________________________ powers. 7. You can never do too much for a real _________________________________________ . 8. Never plan to store that kind of apple. It’s the sort that ___________________________ . 9. Whenever he plays checkers, he _________________________ each move a dozen times. 10. Keep your arm off that freshly-painted table or you will ___________________the finish. Now write five sentences of your own with hidden words. Remember: You should be able to rearrange the letters in one word to fill in the missing blank. A. ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ B. ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ C. ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ D. ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ E. ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________
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Answer Key In Hiding 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
ladies, ideals hire, heir words, sword door, odor keep, peek board, broad much, chum sort, rots checkers, rechecks arm, mar
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Name
E-E-E-E-E-Easy Does It You are a secret agent who must send an important message to a colleague.
Your Mission Give a clear description of a person you suspect of passing secrets to the enemy.
The Problem You and your colleague have agreed that the letter e used in any communication between the two of you means, “You are in immediate danger; go into hiding immediately.” Because you do not want to convey such an alarming message, you cannot use the letter e anywhere in your communication. Furthermore, the message you write must be between 70 and 80 words long ⎯ no more, no less. Any message of that length means, “Beware of that person mentioned in this letter; he or she may be working for the enemy.” See if you can complete the mission.
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Answer Key E-E-E-E-E-Easy Does It Answers will vary. Here is one possibility: This spy looks tall, but not as tall as you. This spy is not a woman. This spy has short light brown hair with a touch of gray. This man has a tattoo of a black scorpion on his right arm. This spy has on a gray wool coat with tartan plaid lining. His tan cowboy boots look old. This man is a musician and has a guitar with him. This spy has a diamond ring on his pinky. 79 words
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